Sweet Banana Soup, With Tapioca and Coconut

"A very common dessert in Hanoi. You can serve it hot, cold, or room temp. I personally prefer it hot in winter (yes it does get cold in Hanoi in winter, very actually!)"
 
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photo by Ambervim photo by Ambervim
photo by Ambervim
Ready In:
55mins
Ingredients:
7
Serves:
4
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ingredients

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directions

  • Bring water and coconut milk to boil in a medium saucepan.
  • Add sugar, salt, tapioca.
  • Reduce heat to medium low, let it cook for about 30 minutes, stir frequently.
  • Stir in bananas, remove from heat and let stand for 15 minutes.
  • Note: after you add the bananas, don't stir too much, it'll break up the fruit.
  • Serve hot, or chill for 3-4 hours.
  • Cook time not incl.
  • chill time.

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Reviews

  1. I love this recipe for Che Chuoi. The recipe I got from my sis-in-law is almost exactly same, so I wanted to rate yours. I was going to post it for safe keeping, and I'm glad to see you already have it on here. Yummy. Definately one of my fave desserts. =)
     
  2. Fantastic hot as a soup or cold the next day as a pudding! I used regular tapioca and six very ripe bananas!
     
  3. I made this recipe for my food blog (Travel by Stove) as a part of my Bhutan entry. This was a really nice change from the overly sweet and rich American desserts we'd been eating all Easter. I served it hot and I used bananas that were on the greener side, since I don't really like mushy bananas. I also excluded the sesame seeds. It was delicious and made a nice finish to the meal.
     
  4. I really love this soup. I am eating it hot right now. However the rest in the fridge for serving tonight. The tapioca imparts far more flavor than I thought it would. It is nice to have a soup in which I can still see the bananas. The sesame seeds do add. I can't wait to have it cold tonight! I can imagine that shredded or flaked coconut would be a wonderful addition.
     
  5. This is wonderful and very like what I was served in Vietnam. The recipe is very acurate with the prep time and servings. It tastes great warm, is more like a pudding when served cool. To speed up the cooking time by about 10 minutes you can increas the heat, but stir constantly or else you'll have a mess! If I were to add anything it would be pandanus leaf extract.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I love food. I always think that's one of the few things in life we should all spend more time with, have more care in the food we eat and how and how much. I moved to New York right after college. I work long hours, but that's the case at all financial consulting firms in the city. I cannot list all the perks involved with living in the city. There are so many amazing restaurants here. Some insanely expensive, some so cheap you can't believe. I have been having lots and lots of fun trying them out. Moreover, New York seems to have endless supply of world class, and world varied, ingredients, which makes cooking infinitely more fun.
 
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